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In a shocking rebuttal to the protests against the death of 7-year-old Pradyumn Thakur at Ryan International School in Bhondsi, the chief executive officer (CEO) of the school, Ryan Pinto, posted a video message calling the school “a victim of unfortunate circumstances.”
In the video, Pinto “requests” everyone to not hold the school culpable of a crime. He added that neither he nor his school will succumb to the various “false allegations.”
But the reality is very different.
A three-member committee, headed by the District Education Officer, submitted a report on 10 September, revealing the many security lapses at Ryan International. Had only the school adhered to the guidelines issued by the Gurugram police back in 2014, Pradyumn would have still been alive today.
Not only does Pinto fail to provide reason for such lapses, he also unapologetically failed to even acknowledge the findings of the committee.
Here are the Gurugram Police guidelines flouted by the ‘victims of unfortunate circumstances’:
1. According to the guidelines, the schools should have just one entry/exit point and it also should be manned.
Not only did Ryan’s Bhondsi branch, where the incident took place, have four entry points, three of them were unmanned and had no compound walls.
2. The report states that there should be separate toilets for girls and boys, for teachers, and separately for support staff.
The committee, in its report, revealed that there were no separate toilets and washrooms for the 40 bus drivers and conductors of the school.
3. The administration should let all the employees, both teaching and non-teaching staff, where they have access to.
This access list, should also be circulated as an internal memo and be displayed on the notice boards across the school.
Is Pinto’s ignorance towards the security lapses a sign by itself of the kind of accountability the school assumes it holds? Does he actually believe that he was ‘unjustly blamed’?
The Quint also visited six other schools in Gurugram to understand how they ensure the safety of the students and how they have bucked up after the brutal murder. However, most schools were skeptical to talk about or divulge information about their security guidelines.
An administration superintendent of a neighbouring international school, on condition of anonymity, said:
Sudha Goyal, the principal of Scottish High School, said that she had a review meeting with her top staff in the light of the incident at Ryan School.
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